Written Thesis and design log

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Úna Breathnach Hifearnáin Student Number : 09002201

description

My theoretical thesis ideas and writings

Transcript of Written Thesis and design log

  • na Breathnach Hifearnin Student Number : 09002201

  • ABSTRACT

    My thesis entitled Reclaiming | constructed Wilderness, looks simultaneously at the notion of wilderness and of the construction and preservation of such; to create a better reality for our country through proposed architectural intervention.

    I analysed my interests in the relationship of nature and architecture ; at places constructed by man which were inevitably being reclaimed by the overpowering force of nature. I am fascinated by the edges of our architectural interventions, of the boundaries that they create within the context of their siting and how we can blur such so that we may achieve a symbiotic relationship with nature. The ecotones between habitats and biomes both those real and constructed were where my interests lie.

    I read a number of sources around the topic, authors including : Gilles Clement, Arundhati Roy, Rachel Carson, Ian Mc Harg, Eugene Odum and Aldo Leopold. In reading on disintegration and natural processes in biomes, I was inspired to create architecture which may pay homage to these natural occurrences all around us. I used reed beds to further cleanse water in the lake within the site and proposed to farm and feed the land so to validate living in this place. The final paper goes through my theoretical written idea and also aims to illustrate and annotate my design process. Finally it shows the drawings and architectural models which I constructed to represent my final thesis proposal and physical representation of the theoretical standing.

    My thesis project is about using architecture to reclaim wilderness in a place seemingly natural but that in truth is created from a number of unnatural processes, sited to the West of Limerick city within the Irish cement factory compound, my project emerges from the soil. The buildings act as a new topography on the site, one to be walked over; to allow people to experience what is there in a new way. They also act as a framework for nature and would allow for the eventual reclamation of wilderness on the site, thus giving it back to nature.

    The final aim being that the project acts as a critique of those places where we ordinarily wouldnt or couldnt live or inhabit; to site something in a place that is created from a number of unnatural processes. The result of this thesis and research I find categorically lies in ways to deal with disused industrial space and abused sites within our country. It looks at using a new method of constructing a topography of place that will heal the damage which has been done to the site on which it is located. To use architecture as a tool for nourishment of land in collaboration with that which we perceive as wilderness, that can reclaim the framework of architecture and through its disintegration create a new reality of place, one imitating metabolic processes of nature.

    Not only is another world possible. She is on her way. On a quiet day I can hear her breathing. Arundhati Roy

  • Architecture for me meAns to shelter , to enclose to delineAte one spAce from Another by meAns of division And simultAneous connection. connections of plAces And of boundAries thAt previous to its resurrection Are unimAginAble, impossible even. Architecture needs to not only be plAced on A site And to Address the site but to sit within A site to be pArt of thAt very site. A pArAsitic entity which not only tAkes from its host but feeds it.

    i Am fAscinAted by the notion of wilderness of the nAturAl unnAturAl thAt exists All Around us todAy As A result of mAns intervention And nAtures ever overpowering Ability to reclAim thAt which is built upon it.

    constructed wilderness fAscinAtes me And the possibility of intervening in such A reAlity And creAting A new, which meshes together Architecture And lAndscApe in symbiosis with one Another .

    i Am proposing A new living plAce And extension to limerick city, At cAstlemungret , co. limerick. the site which exists there , within A cement fActory compound is one of mAny overlAid lAyers of mAn-mAde lAndscApe. with A mAn-mAde lAke, A quArry, A motorwAy tunnel which slices through the site, A wAste wAter treAtment plAnt , A cement plAnt And bordered by the river shAnnon to the north.

    i would like to creAte A new sort of world there, A microcosm: A plAce in which people mAy live in A new wAy. in close proximity to wAter And in direct contAct with the lAnd on which the

    project As proposed shAll sit. it will look to creAting A number of climAte zones And buildings in the form of skins which Act As shelter for the inhAbitAnts. it will open up this cul de sAc in the city to the people of the city And others. the project will tAke hints from the Architecture of eArly settlement And of hedgerows As A wAy of dividing spAce.. it will creAte A pAth, An inhAbited one. living in this plAce will meAn A both individuAl And collective experience will be hAd, one where A notion of A forum for discussion And interAction will be to the forefront.

  • Pagebrief 6

    schedule of AreAs 7-9

    schedule of site 10-11

    written thesis And design log 13-30

    ethicAl lAnding

    lAndscApe : nAturAl vs. constructed

    hAbituAl living : edge

    decAy : decomposition of thought And scArs

    living : resilience And residue

    endnotes 30-32

    bibliogrAphy 33-34

    finAl thesis project drAwings And models 39-55

    imAge informAtion 56

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    to design A new living plAce for cAstlemungret, co. limerick , to live in A plAce where you COULDNT BEFORE AND POSSIBLY SHOULDNT. TO SET UP

    A new reAlity for this plAce: one where boAting is still relevAnt. in which the wAter is used As A key feAture to open up this cul de sAc in the city to the people. Arriving by boAt you enter the site to A number of new reAlities And possibilities. the project will look to A given moment in the current society in which we hAve creAted mAny mAn-mAde reAlities which Are then reclAimed by the nAturAl by the wilderness And end up AppeAring As reAl And nAturAl As Any other reAlity which mAy hAve existed on site. the project Aims to Add A new lAyer of

    lAndscApe And of topogrAphy to these reAlities An ArchitecturAl lAndscApe which will Act in symbiosis with the nAtures of the site crossing over boundAries creAted blurring them And using And reinstAting those historicAlly one existing slowly crAwling boundAries of the hedgerow,using its eArly inhAbitAtion As inspirAtion for dwelling. the Architecture will Aim to cleAnse pollutAnts on the site And Address An new form of living in close proximity to wAter.i Am designing three groups of dwelling on the site thAt of the permAnent for A cApAcity to 1000 inhAbitAnts, thAt of the temporAry to the sAme cApAcity, finAlly thAt of the trAnsitory which could host An event the site of the city to

    5000 inhAbitAnts. the hierArchy of spAce should delineAte over the site All the required functions. the project will be About A pAth, A pAth somehow representAtive of life, deAth And birth in Architecture And in process. the three groups will be woven together with A mix of robust And delicAte elements. it will project A speculAtive future using densities And porosities with A project cleverly using AdjAcencies And crossovers between groups And their respective pAths. Architecture And lAndscApe proposAls will be simultAneously present And ever blurred somehow representing the possible Ambiguity of Architecture.

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    how to creAte A living ArchitecturecAn nAture wrAp the building And tAke over once the timber IS ROTTED AWAY CAN THERE BE A JUXTAPOSITION OF MATERIAL,

    DELICATE WIRE OR STEEL AND POROUS TIMBER AND PLANTING

    ------------------------------------------------------------------------------What is LIVING? in Permanence 1. PERMANENT LIVING FOR 1000 PEOPLEIndividual SLEEPING space (per person) 10.8m2 10800m2

    Bathroom (per person) 4m2 400m2

    Kitchen (communal) 1000m2

    Dining (communal) 2560m2

    Community room- Homework,playing,meeting 2560m2

    Laundry 360m2

    TOTAL 17600m2

    What is LIVING? Temporarily 2. TEMPORARY LIVING FOR 1000 PEOPLEIndividual SLEEPING 7800m2

    Toilet Facilities 400m2

    Shower facilities 252m2

    Kitchen (communal) 720m2

    Dining (communal) 2560m2

    Laundry 360m2

    TOTAL 12092m2

    What is LIVING? in Transition3. TRANSITORY LIVING FOR 5000 PEOPLE

    Individual SLEEPING 20,000m2

    Toilet Facilities 2000m2

    Shower facilities 1000m2

    Kitchen (communal) 2000m2

    Dining (communal) 4000m2

    TOTAL 29000m2

    What does LIVING need to LIVE?4. OTHER FACILITIESFarming 125,000m2

    Growing of crops 125,000m2

    Food processing 5,000m2

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    Cafe 200m2

    Market Space 900m2

    Energy Garden 250,000m2

    Forum/Conference Centre Big Room 20,000m2

    Work spaces (50) 500m2

    Research Units (20) 200m2

    Creche (50 children) 300m2

    School Rooms 400m2

    Laboratory classes 150m2

    Art room 180m2

    Library (10000 books) 300m2

    O ces for Forum 90m2

    Storage 400m2

    Services 400m2

    Stages (10) 1200m2

    Dovecotes TOTAL 530,220m2

    How to get to LIVING?5. ACCESS FACILITIESPier on site 30000m2

    Pier in city 2000m2

    TOTAL 32,000m2

    Water - Access by reed beds to cleaned water in reservoir Drainage - Dirty water drained into system to be cleaned by reed bed puri cation and to be recycledPier water access - Access to site to be by water; bicycle. Path trail (Public space) - A path to lead from the pier and to meander through the grounds en route to the re pro led quarry sanctuaryQuarry habitual living - Dovecotes and reed beds on a timber construction cantilevering

    TOTAL AREA OF PROPOSAL : 620,192m2

    TOTAL INTERNAL AREA : 86,812m2

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    NOISE POLLUTION

    Quarry - Needs re-profi ling to be used as habitat

    Cement Manufacturing plant - Will be decommissioned in

    about twenty years

    Motorway Tunnel - To be bridged over

    ODOUR POLLUTION

    Water Treatment Plant - 12 hA

    OTHER PARAMETERS

    Bunlicky Clay pit lake - To be reprofi led as a habitat for

    living 50 hA

    River Shannon

    Outlet Jetty for water treatment plant

    Total area of site = 4km2

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    What kind of environment and which earth will we bequeath to future generations. Gilles Clement

    Reclaiming Wilderness Grey &Brown = Green When I think of Architecture , no longer do I imagine a building per se or the epitome of what I once thought architecture was representative of, but something more systematic something not invasive, which is gentle to the soil on which it sits , soft in confi guration and with a equally gentle program as delicate as its construction.

    Our world is changing. Our habitats are changing. Our ire has been manipulated and neglected by the wraths of a failed globalisation of a performed gentrifi cation and a greed of a

    nation and outsiders which scarred our shores. Can we heal those wounds by accepting the diversities which have been bestowed upon us and make a move to increase further this diversity and to rejuvenate our soil using the powers supplied to us by our very nature, by the spirit of this powerful Oilen who weeps in her sleep. Let us not condemn the powers of change or neglect them. Let us use them to fuel our future through diversifi cation of the very places they seduce and abuse. To work not with what comforts us but with that which terrifi es us.

    We architects are typically interested in how we can create a better reality for a place, in how we can negate the current situation and improve it by means of architecture. Why do plants grow where they do to create the space in which we inhabit?

    1. Ethical LANDING

    In Sand County Almanac, Aldo Leopold proposes a Land Ethic. Just as we have human rights which we try to protect, he suggests that we should also protect the lands which we inhabit and that they should be no less important than that of our own rights. Leopold suggests that we may extend ethics to mean a struggle for existence of all species and that this includes plants and animals. Leopold writes about having a test site where we can judge how good a piece of land performs, In many cases we literally do not know how good a performance to expect from healthy land unless, we have a wild area for comparison to a sick one 1

    Can we create a cleansing architecture? Architecture which will grow from the nature itself, which not only responds

    in my design i wAs hoping to creAte A new reAlity on A site where the processes of reclAmAtion of nAture were evident .

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    to but clings to the site on which it becomes articulated, seeming ephemeral which has a certain respect for natural habitat edges and principles of the hedgerow, softly crawling to morph habitats of mans interference. An architecture which will also run in a cycle of life and of death, its sole purpose to meditate the relationship between human kind and earth of society and soil.

    I want to examine a subject somewhat unstudied in nature; the way we live and that of death, how that can be translated to the notions of landscape abuse and what proposing a new sort of architectural landscape may do to aid the reclamation of a wilderness type of existence. Gans and Weisz describe in Extreme sites , brownfi eld sites as, Th e mine, the port, the river bank, the coastal site, the agricultural fi eld, the landfi ll the dam and

    the campsite. Th ey are extreme in there circumstances because they are simultaneously damaged yet at the centres of human concern, theatres of often cyclical will to Plan, Build, Grow ,Prosper and Abandon.

    I would like to look at such sites, the wasteland of globalisation and to use them to prevent societal collapse and decline. Sites of a so called third landscape2 within which we can create a fourth landscape for survival, which does not only end at abandonment, but continues in a cyclical process with abandonment being only a mere seed of a possibility; a death to be reborn, a new life to begin, a life where place and action are bound. Brownfi eld sites are those sites that areextreme in their circumstances because, they are simultaneously damaged, yet, at the centres of

    human concern3, which have been abused until they have no more life left to give. What if there could be a systemic architecture that can save these sites? I am interested to create a symbiosis between society and soil, through an architectural intervention on a site of a latent condition that of the brownfi eld, which can nourish the very land on which it rests; one which can repair our weeping country.

    Jane Jacobs analysed cities and the phenomenology of cities, Her views have something in common with the land ethic of Leopold in that she expresses the relevance of comparing a phenomenon to a similar site which is missing an important element.Sometimes you learn more about a phenomenon when it isnt there, like water when the well runs dry or like neighbourhood stores which are not being built in our redeveloped city areas.4

    in the first semester i looked At A number of AlternAte projects on vArious sites where the Abuse of mAnkind And reclAmAtion of nAture wAs to be seen.

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    Leopold proposes that, Wilderness is a resource that can shrink but, not grow 5

    In Environ(ne)ment , Gilles Clement elaborates on the notion of a third landscape, and of the sites where this is a possibility. Th ose, Leftover/transitional spaces in the city and countryside, they are key to restoring the complexity and biodiversity of our natural landscape,which have been threatened by agriculture/urbanism and suburban development. 6

    I want to analyse the role of humans to their environments 7, the habitat in which we live. Environments we have given ourselves the right to manage. We should

    be in harmony with nature, in so far as possible and aim at providing a framework for fostering wilderness, reverting back to nature and in so doing allowing our country to replenish itself; to make space for that unanticipated event to come. Such spaces, according to Clement, are the carriers of our biological future and I concur. I see the preservation of sites of such a third landscape, as a biological necessity, like a reservoir as such for the biome; country and the planet.

    He discusses a Symbiotic Man. Man here meaning that dominant power in a landscape or system which becomes undermined from within, this which then collapses. On breaking the system; man invents new models of exchange. In the life cycle the tree or the man then returns to the environment from which it takes energy,renourishing it. Th e symbiotic man answers the question as posed by

    the planetary garden,How to exploit diversity,without destroying it?.Th e environment or man, constantly recycles energy without any accumulation of waste. Th e system then exchanges directly with his neighbour for cultural enrichment of society. Th is new economy is characteristic of a symbiotic man where A dead leaf on the ground is not waste it is food. When one system is doomed to ruin; another is born.

    In a symbiotic landscape,Species that cover the earth and clutch the soil and humus, can play, if they wish. 8We too can play, but, not at the cost of other entities. Wilderness was here fi rst and will be here long after we are gone that is; if we let it. Clements Manifest der dritten Landschaft ,( Th e Manifesto of the Th ird Landscape), examines the landscapes, and then arrives at a conclusion that we ought to preserve

    i designed A frAmework one which protects the sites Acting As A blAnket drAped on the site. i imAgined it As something which would stArt off quite smAll And grow And multiply through the involvement of people.

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    the third, being of the most diverse, which will sustain our future.

    Why not go on to a fourth landscape; to overlay an element of an ephemeral, architectural landscape which when it dies would give birth to a fi fth landscape, of a new form of decay, a decay which may be able to nourish and to heal the lands which we have exhausted and scarred; that of the brown and of the grey. Th ird Landscape is the way that nature reclaims that which is built upon it.

    Th e indefi nite character of the Th ird Landscape has its source in the fact that the evolution of ancient biological beings which constitute an existing territory, is given freedom to exist, so that human decisions are excluded consequently.

    2. LANDSCAPE Natural vs. Constructed Landscape which I discuss here is something of a constructed term to express a natural reality. In this understanding landscape may also refer to something seemingly unnatural on fi rst observation.

    A number of defi nitions are necessary I fi nd to move further. Landscape for me is a combination of two elements those being Nature and Ecology: Raymond Williams defi nes nature as the material world itself taken as including or not including human beings ;what man has not made.9

    Th e term ecology developed from the notion of habitat and became the study of the relations of plant and animals with each other and their habitat.10

    Th e word wilderness (Old English wildornes land inhabited only by wild animals, from wild dor wild deer +-NESS11) is much contested. Many would argue that wilderness in the true sense is something which no longer exists and which merely refers to a situation or time long gone before of which we as humans hold no comprehension. Wilderness is a sublime, romanticised notion of ecology. It looks at the permanence or durability of nature and the transience or mortality of human life.

    Th e city is so vast and we have so much to say to each other. 12

    Mostafavi in Ecological Urbanism, deals with a notion of why we would want to create a restored ecological

    the designs were to Act As A frAmework for AppropriAtion by users, A frAmework for A new wAy of living And for A forum of discussion.

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    situation within our cities. In so doing he begins to look at settlements of mankind and the vast sprawling notion of the city. Th is also refers to a critical ecological situation. It is evident in our abused sites : mines, quarries and landfi lls in which where we deposit waste or excavate for our needs. . If we were to create a new form of habitat or microcosm on a site of such a critical ecology it is necessary to have an element of memory of that gone before and in some ways of that having never existed, the wilderness. Th e site then, acts as a mnemonic device for the making of the new.13What is resulting is a type of relational approach between the terrain, the built and the viewers participatory experiences.14

    Waste is a huge issue for todays world, it can be used as a measure of who we are and of what we are doing to ourselves. We consume; dispose of and ignore. As Mohsen

    Mostafavi observes,

    Who really has a sense of the mountains of garbage that are produced by most cities, out of sight, out of mind. If we dont see the garbage of our culture both literally and metaphorically then we are not confronting the reality of what the garbage actually says about us.15

    Nature and the preservation of the wilderness needs to be a fundamental concern of our collective design ethos. We need to recognise the place of humankind within habitats and to create a new social model for reform of the way in which we design, ecologically. Kwinter says Th ere can be no ecological thinking that does not place human social destiny at the heart of

    our posture towards environmental context. 16In the essay entitledthe Return of nature, the notion of architecture using the demystifi cation of the ecological to portray the true possibilities inherent within the projects articulation is described.17In the similarly named Return to Nature, the architects propose a claim on behalf of nature18.Th e architects wish to accelerate the process of decay and reclamation to preserve the site , which was a military fortress strategically located on one the highest hill at the southern edge to the Palestinian city of Beit Sahour in the Bethlehem region. To preserve it as it is with all of its controversy intact, to allow the nature to fl ourish and for wilderness (aided by man) to reclaim the site Given the competing claims for the site, and the controversial militancy around it, our intention is not to renovate and convert the base to

    following the creAtion of these projects i then criticised my ideAs And AnAlysed whAt were the strongest elements of which to bring forwArd into the second semester. thAt of the notion of A lAyer of lAndscApe, A frAmework or blAnket which would mesh perfectly to A site.

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    another function, but rather to control and accelerate the process of degradation, disintegration and overgrowth. 19

    Petropolis,20 an evocative documentary fi lm by Peter Mettler, looks at the Alberta tar sands, in a new light, subjectively; interesting considering the defi nite environmental impact of the processes involved. Mettler creates a sense of being petrifi ed and somewhat alone like a bird, gliding over a vast expanse of forest and fog , then seeing a land torn apart, a land so full of industry, of waste, destruction. He expresses to us the harsh reality of monopolised landscape through imagery: Land stripped back for large chasms of open pit mining : Like a sea of holes in what would have once been a forest, now, a wet muddy bed of GREED.

    Th e bitumen upgrader emits tons of smoke which are reminiscent of the fog that had disguised the forest .Th ere is a constant presence of the noises associated with extraction, buzzing in the background. We observe the moving of trucks over the land and how this inscribes each layer of landscape with a new reality which we see in direct relation to the white noise of regrettable cleavages of industry. Th e tar is as a harsh line on the land, natural, yet stripped back so much, it is revealed as an unnatural image. It raises awareness of an inherent although ignored problem, that of the human greed to exploit nature, instead of fostering a symbiotic relationship with that very nature. Th e nature of this place becomes that of industry, of the vast abused wasteland. Mettler uses only very select narration of the explanation of fl ying as fl ying ironically is fuelled by petroleum. Th rough this fi lm we are presented with a new

    perspective of a landscape which we cannot comprehend from the ground.. We look at the imagery of the abused landscape which has been altered by industry,in the forest which used to stand here a chemist named Karl Clarke spent much of his life trying to fi gure out how to extract bitumen from sand. Before his death in 1968, Karl Clarke told his daughter Mary that he could never revisit this Place.(the forest where the tar sands now lie) Th e fi lm ends on an inquisitive note,Th e expected life of the sun is 15 billion years we (humans) have made ingenious use of bitumen for 80, what will we do next?21

    Th e reality of our consumption and our ignorance to the waste which we produce is something known to all nations. Th e question should now be of remedy as we cannot bring back the past.

    the mAin emphAsis to be on creAting A project which wAs in symbiosis to the site on which it sits And which would creAte A new reAlity in A plAce where wilderness constructed wAs AvAilAble to be reclAimed.

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    Not only is another world possible. She is on her way. On a quiet day I can hear her breathing Arundhati Roy 22

    In Oil City Petro-landscapes and sustainable futures Michael Watts looks at the notions of cities dependent for articulation and perhaps survival on oil. He discusses the notion of oil as a commodity which became laundered. Balzac explains this asTh e secret of great wealth with no obvious source is some forgotten crime. Forgotten because it was done neatly23 Th ese cities have an associated petrolic landscape, such as that of the imagery I described above, a landscape of lines, axes, nodes, points and fl ows 24. Th ese become somewhat residual and abandoned like the mine, the quarry ,the landfi ll; sites of abuse and turmoil; apocalyptic even. Th ere is however something in these

    landscapes.

    Ed Burtynsky photographs such landscapes and aims to explain what life they hold,Between the natural landscape and a man imprinted landscape. Th ey become leftovers after the banquet, residual territories, not quite dead, as they regenerate, they begin to generate a new life, but it is a compromised one. 25

    Ed Burtynsky has a fascination with petrolic and manufactured landscapes. In the fi lm Manufactured landscapes , Burtynsky looks the landscape of manufacture, how we create these places, how these places create things and how these things in turn shape us. In his fi lm Burtynsky shows us the monotonous landscape of the factory, the camera moves as goods would on a production line. Th e fi lm is depicting a particular type of nature, that having

    been manufactured and created by its process. By creating this fi lm, Burtynsky hoped to bring appreciation for what nature represents. We come from nature. We are part of it. Raising awareness that If we destroy nature we destroy ourselves. Burtynsky chose to represent, in particular, manufactured landscapes because they best represent who we are in relation to our climates. In this fi lm we are presented with a chance to comprehend a very di erent landscape. Burtynsky is interested in portraying surreal landscapes which have been totally transformed by man.In his work he creates images which in turn bring those other landscapes into our consciousness.

    In his fi lm we see workers in a factory produce goods with precision,focus,repetition Th e expression on the workers faces shows such a process, machinelike behaviour.

    i Am proposing A new living plAce And extension to the city forum bAse for limerick city, my design is being governed by the overriding ideAs derived from my writing And reseArch. reclAiming wilderness meAns to me in An ArchitecturAl sense: the discovery of A plAce which AppeArs to be nAturAl but, which is creAted by A number of mAn mAde processes.

    RECLAIMING | (CONSTRUCTED) Wilderness na Breathnach HIfearnin

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    We are repeatedly shown the hands of the worker, the human side of this landscape, the involvement of the somewhat natural. Hands that clean , produce ,refi ne and assemble. We see all these workers as a collective yet, we also clearly have a direct view of the individual process within the communal setting. We are informed however that this fi lm is in itself a manufactured landscape as we hear Burtynsky discuss the shots, this is a subjective landscape portrayal. Everything I am doing is connected to the things I am photographing.Th e landscapes Burtynsky photographs and depicts are intentional. Whole cities in China were being moved to make way for a reservoir and he shows us this reality where people were paid by brick to take their cities apart. Th e harsh reality of a manufactured landscape. We are changing the planet, the air, the water, the land and not just china ,the world at large. Th e photographs Burtynsky

    takes and this fi lm he has made allows people to see their world very di erently.26

    3. Habitual Living : EDGE

    A di erent world is necessary if we are to continue to live within habitats, respect the edges of these habitats and start to mesh such edges together to create new realities using architecture as a tool to do so.

    Kongjian Yu , Chinas pre-eminent landscape architect , writes on the notion of the bigfoot revolution, as something which goes against the norm as expected of an urban society we have lost the understanding of what it is to live and survive in a habitat, of the habitats very essence. We need to respect our habitats and through living in symbiosis

    with them and respecting their inherent beauty we will have a more resilient landscape and world:We replace native messy and productive shrubs and crops with fancy fl owers that bear no fruit, support no other services, and serve no other function than pleasing human beings; and we uproot hardy wild grasses and replace them with smooth ornamental lawns that consume tons of water.27Th us, we create a little foot habitat to live in. However,Little feet are deformed and are on a path to death big feet were the original, the wild, in which nature had intended, and so that is what we should look back to in time of crises. We now need to become more aware of natural systems and to foster them Ingber describes the di erences between a design of nature and that of mankind.

    Humans build with structural materials, and

    A plAce into which i cAn Add An ArchitecturAl intervention which will once AgAin Alter the reAlity of thAt plAce And give it Another lAyer of lAndscApe And overlAy of meAning. the site i hAve chosen is thAt of the irish cement compound in cAstlemungret, co. limerick.

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    then add separate systems for temperature, cooling, plumbing,electricity and communications. Nature builds with multifunctional materials that provide all of these functions simultaneously 28

    In the essay,Nature Culture by Kathryn Moore, again this notion of a close association between us as humans and nature is explored, as nature being what we make of it 29 It discusses nature as something which is also a ected by culture over time , in that: Landscape is not only the physical contentit also refl ects our memories and values, the experiences we have of a place as citizens, employers, visitors, students, tourists. It is the material, cultural and social context of our lives. 30

    Cultural nature and a need for memory or a residual

    excess in renegotiations of existing space exist because, the quality of our environment is directly proportional to the quality of our lives31

    Lister looks at the idea of land-scraping32, of scraping away the existing land to make the architects palette-to then create insurgent ecologies which have an inherent hybrid capacity for resilience through articulation of a tension of nature and culture in which we honor the land that sustains us.

    In Panarchy : Understanding transformation in human and natural systems the inherent yet not neccesarily benefi cial relationship of the human to the natural environment is explored. It looks at people and nature as the culmination of an ecosystem and this henceforth as a social system, examined in terms of quantity and quality. As there is no such thing as nature separated from human social

    processes33.Th e adaptive landscape within ecosystems has been and is continuously transformed,ecosystems are defi ned as places on earth that consist of biotic components (life) and abiotic or physical components.34 Humans simultaneously depend upon and change or destroy their own habitats. Humans have an advantage over nature in that we are sense making individuals, While nature has the capacity for remembrance,humans and human systems have the capacity of consciousness and refl exivity.35

    In the Iconography of landscape Peter Fullers essay Th e Geography of Mother Nature, gives us another perception on the notion of nature. He elaborates on a lot of John Ruskins thinking .

    THERE IS NOT WEALTH BUT LIFE36

    the site comprises of A quArry, some of which hAs AlreAdy been decommissioned, the rest will be within twenty yeArs, A clAy pit which hAs been filled with wAter pumped from the quArry, which Also wAs decommissioned following the ceAse of wet process cement mAnufActuring, now AppeAring As A lAke. A wAste wAter treAtment plAnt to the eAst, the new motorwAy tunnel splits the lAke in two As it pAsses through the site And under the shAnnon giving the site its northern boundAry.

  • 2424242424

    Th is statement related to his witnessing of total awe of nature of its sheer brilliance and virginity. Ruskins views of nature changed as he realised that there was in fact nothing serendipitous about it, it was as it were. Ruskin was dogged by a sense of failure of nature, as it were feeling that nature had been reduced to the grey lifeless monotone that so repelled him.37

    When we discuss nature and wilderness we may over sentimentalise the idea of something serene. Ruskin was before his time in realising that nature was something which was and would be further corrupted. Fuller describes that:

    Ruskins perceptions that the actions of men might be leading to a real failure in nature, and to a

    potential annihilation of human life, may turn out to be his most prophetic insights into this era of acid rain, ecological devastation and potential nuclear winter.38

    Brown and Harris in Tackling wicked problems through the transdisciplinary imagination discuss what through using combined minds we can do to solve the problems we are currently experiencing globally. As Th ere is little left untouched by us . We are surrounded by the artefacts that support our lifestyle; the haste of the city.... the faceless masses driven by the transactions of city life. Th is is the world we have designed.39 Is there a di erent world possible? Th ere is an analysis of how we deal with our habitats needed as they can no longer cope and will fail to sustain us, Wittingly or not,the everyday demands that we place on landscapes strongly infl uence,how they

    change over time, and the capacity they have to meet other demands,including other and future human wants.40

    4. DECAY: Decomposition of thought and scars

    When we think of decay we generally imagine something natural decomposing. However, what if that which decays is something more unnatural something more of a constructed nature, of the haste of our cities.

    In Design with nature, 1969, Mc Harg defi nes nature. He goes through nature as mileu, as life, as teacher, and as residue of times past. Of nature which is, more resistant to mans smear, more resilient. 41 Man is the most destructive

    the entire site hAs been creAted by humAn led industriAl processes here we see however nAture As ever triumphAnt returning to mAke All of these mAn-mAde entities seem nAturAl.

  • 2525252525

    and exploitative force on nature. As McHarg writes, Nature is a faintly decorative backdrop to the human play.42 We get an idea that the entities within each ecosystem are in fact indispensable. Let us think then of the atmosphere as the skin of the earth, the outer membrane of the biosphere43 something which is always evolving. So we too can imagine architecture as a system, a skin or a blanket which is ever-changing.

    Water and air move through all life, the air surrounds and permeates us, the waters replenish that cistern which is ourselves. 44

    Th ere is also death to consider because as long as we are living beings we will die.Death is necessary as is the decomposition of wastes and the matter of recent

    life. 45 Evolution is necessary for us to appreciate the increased consciousness of nature. I started to think now of architecture as a cycle, if it were a skin through which things pass by osmosis, a healing skin or blanket that smothered pollutants and created nutrition on a site with a shifting landscape, always decomposing. Th e cycles of life, death and decay recycle the increasing storehouse of ordered matter. 46Mc Harg uses the representation of a capsule as an alternative earth in which there should be no depletion of resources.47 He recognises the earth as a creative process and all its processes also as somewhat creative being, a self perpetuating evolving system 48Consumers and producers in this line of thought are also creative and life persists because life eats life.49 We should remember that Nature is our creation and we shall dominate and subjugate it for that is our divine destiny.50

    Currently we assume man as ever triumphant. We need to approach things more holistically and look for a symbiotic relationship in way of dictatorship. We need to respect the land as mentioned when I discussed Leopolds land ethic. We can approach design in a new way Let us ask the land where are the best sites51Odum wrote on the Fundamentals of Ecology. In this text he explains to us the overall notion of ecology as we now understand it and as I tried to defi ne earlier. Something which I was particularly interested in was the fundamental process of decomposition, of breaking to particulate detritus, of morphing to humus, and then through mineralisation, fi nally decomposing. Decompositionis an absolutely vital function,because if it did not occur, all the nutrients would soon be tied up in dead bodies and no new life could be produced. 52

    i propose to Add A number of new processes to this site.

  • 2626262626

    Another aspect of interest is what is happening at the edge of one biome to the next, on the peripheries, where the elements are as I imagine softly crawling. An ecotone is a transition between two or more diverse communities. 53 Where this occurs the tendency for increased variety and density . Is known as the edge e ect. 54Parasites are things which feed from a host, maybe adding a parasitical intervention to a damaged site could be something which heals by its very gesture.One persons trash basket is anothers living space.55

    Th ere is a wilderness created by the sea of trash in a landfi ll, a coarse wilderness but one that can nevertheless be inhabited. In the journal article, Rewilding at the Urban Fringe, the writers suggest that wilderness is something

    which could injected anywhere No tract of land is too small for the wilderness idea. 56As discussed previous wilderness is now a romanticised idea but which is viewed as an area where natural processes are permitted to operate without human interference 57A notion of rewilding is explored and its management. However, the process is thought of as static which for me causes a crisis of identity as to how a process about something so ever changing could ever be termed static. It confronts directly sites of third landscape where designers may be able to speed up the decomposition of man made elements to allow re-injected wilderness to thrive. Both landscapes and the way we construct them in our minds are constantly evolving 58

    William Cronon rethinks the human place in

    nature in his book Uncommon Ground. He explores the romanticised notion of wilderness as an island in the polluted sea of urban-industrial modernity the one place we can turn for escape from our own too-muchness.59 For Cronon it is somewhere a refuge we must somehow recover if we hope to save the planet. He acknowledges however that it is a predominantly human construction that could be contaminated by the very stu of which its made60, that is if it is over sentimentalised as a construction.Th e world we now live in is in no way a natural one, Whereas earlier generations inhabited a natural world that remained more or less una ected by their actions, our own generation is uniquely di erent. We and our children henceforth live in a biosphere completely altered by our own activity, a planet in which the human and natural can

    to give this cul de sAc in the city A new purpose: one which will meAn it will not simply become dormAnt in twenty yeArs when its industriAl future is no longer.

  • 2727272727

    no longer be distinguished,because the one has overwhelmed the other.61

    Cronon discusses the idea of home and that we need to think of our habitat as home in order to live rightly in the world, as home is the place in the world we try to sustain so we can pass on what is best in it to our children.62

    In Th e Social creation of nature, Neil Evernden looks at where the idea of nature comes from and uses the story of the child maturing as an anecdote for our recognition of our surroundings and of that non- human reality. Th e idea of a naive infant may be a fi ction,it is at least a useful one for our purposes, for it allows us to imagine the encounter of an non enculturated human with nature.63We can then appreciate the importance of immersion in nature to the creation of an individual human64 in that it helps the child to realise

    there are things in the world that are not me; that there is other.

    5.LIVING: Resilience and Residue

    So what then is nature, as I have discussed it is not only that of the natural but of constructions which are cultural and otherwise infl uenced by change over time. However, not matter what we see as nature or natural or habitual we also must appreciate that we must live in such places. When we do so we test the resilience of the so called nature or natural and we leave behind residue with every change to the so called natural we make.

    Th ere have been many e orts to contain the Mississippi over the lifetime of its growth. Th e river

    evolves and will not be contained but in the human mind-set this is mere irrelevance and designers and engineers pursue to contain it. Th e e orts are all part of, inhabiting an enigmatic landscape65, one which moves and shifts .Mississippi Floods : Designing a shifting Landscape looks at how environments inhabit people66, which is maybe what we should consider, rather than it being vice versa. As the river is not only fl ooding but remembering, just as we do and wish to when we create a new piece of architecture, we maintain the residue of the past, clinging to it. It is a method of cognitive fl ooding which has occured over and over, the dichotomy of nature after all and that which we so praise; As is the rush of the imagination, our fl ooding.67

    In 1938 Vernadsky wrote an introduction to Th e Biosphere and the Nosphere, where he expresses that he

    i propose this plAce is heAled by the presence of this new Architecture, which will be divided into two entities of lAndscApe which hope to symbioticAlly merge together creAting And extension to the city.

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    thinks we are moving towards a world of thought, We live in a transition to the Nosphere. 68Ironic is that we still have not really reached this realm I fi nd. Th e biosphere is that place where we live now and did then, the only place where homogenous living matter exists. Man tends to increase the size of the biosphere,69 to suit his own needs. It contains all heterogenous matter whether living or inert. Th e inert matter greatly predominates 70over the living and they involve fundamental di erences in their spatio temporal manifestations. Th e biosphere is in fact the only terrestrial envelope where life can exist so why do we abuse it? Man cannot be separated from it.71 We are connected to the biosphere and to one in another in indissoluble connections and henceforth why life is a cosmic phenomenon somehow sharply distinct from inert matter72. Th e concept of the Nosphere looks at mankind post-war and how the residue

    and abuse is to be dealt with. It is a new realm where thinkers may take part in a terrestrial geological process in an intensive and systematic way. Th e idea of life is linked to living matter, organisms and to evolution, which does not occur in inert matter. Vernadsky implies that we should pull together to look for change in what the masses require. Societal change is necessary to make any physical change is what he aptly perceives.Man is striving to emerge beyond the boundaries of his planet into cosmic space. And he probably will do so.73

    He acknowledges we are entering the Nosphere and that we should pull our resources together and face the future with confi dence. Th is somewhat relates to the post boom period to when we are on our way to recovery we once again need to enter this realm of Nosphere, where,

    human brain power resumes the role of shaping its own future and environment, in this Anthropocene, a term coined by ecologist Eugene Stoermer which serves to mark the evidence and extent of human activities that have had a signifi cant global impact on the Earths ecosystems. 74 Th e article discusses the notion of the Anthropocene as a human dominated ecological epoch,supplementing the Holocene. Urbanism in a way exerts the idea of a symbiotic relationship but, also that of abuse and seduction. Urbanisation disconnects people from nature and wilderness in that it encourages manipulation and change of the natural. Th e urban landscape becomes a complicated mosaic of uses, ignoring all natural boundaries or ecotones as put forward by Odum. Human activities both transcend habitat boundaries and di er between patches of the same habitat75

    i Am designing A plAce for living, A new form of living. one where mAny people cAn come together And live in unison within A forum type environment, where there is A communAl Atmosphere.

  • 2929292929

    We create a composite landscape lacking in resilience and continuity. However this landscape also allows us to study the dynamics of ecosystems in that they can patch their connections to surroundings in what is called ecological memory76, much like the river remembering where its bed had been. Th ere is a perception of systemics in how an ecosystem or a city survives, it is not the form itself that is sustainable or not,but the processes that create and are in turn shaped by the form.77

    In Resilience thinking : sustaining ecosystems and people in a changing world 78Walker and Salt discuss the resilience alliance, as a group who are actively exploring ways in which to create a more resilient world they look fi rst at explaining a number of items which we may use to create resilience and how this may be carried out in a number of case studies, in that the human species are living beyond its means on a

    planet with fi nite resources and demand is out of balance with supply. We are using nature more rapidly than it can regenerate79, so therefore we require the thinking as explained to deal with changes. Walker and Salt look at thresholds and system dynamics, being the behavioural change and the adaptive cycles of systems in nature. Resilience as the distance to a threshold80 is described, with the threshold being the point of behavioural change or failure in a habitat.

    Reclaiming wilderness81 , refers to a notion of the wilderness as that which reclaims man made interferences on its lands, which have gone partially or fully into dereliction. However, following this title I then began to question the word wilderness, being something which doesnt exist and perhaps never existed but, as something wild which crawls

    softly creeping on the land. A system which lurks; looking for things to reclaim. Wilderness as a term can be linked to an ecological sublime. Christopher Hitt writes that it is the contemporary inclination to idealize wild nature .82Hitt analyses Habits of thinking from this complex cultural construction called wilderness83And if it is just a construction, then all the better, then perhaps its not the wilderness that reclaims but an architecture which has an inclination to be something of a wilderness. As Hitt continues :

    the false hope of an escape from responsibility, the illusion that we can somehow wipe clean the slate of our past and return to the tabula rasa that supposedly existed before we began to leave

    it will be A seemingly humble existence in An Architecture where A number of skin type divisions like hedgerows springing from the structure will sepArAte privAte spAces from other shAred fAcilities.

  • 303030

    RECLAIMING | (CONSTRUCTED) Wilderness na Breathnach HIfearninWilderness na Breathnach HIfearnin

    our marks on the world. Th e dream of an unworked natural landscape is very much the fantasy of people who had never themselves had to work the land to make a living.84

    Th e implication of wilderness is somewhat of a naivety and by using this word a great misunderstanding is born however, could it also be used to describe a system of healing, which reverts to the memory of the past again looking to the ecological memory or residue. Wilderness is the notion of an otherness, of nature in kind, of that separation of humans from non humans85. Th ere needs to be a certain level of respect of humans to that non human nature of which they did not create. We need to adopt humility and to accept the big foot approach that I talked of before.

    It seems extremely unlikely that a man-made garden could ever be capable of inspiring the sense of wonder, awe and otherness that an old growth forest could.86

    We have however a somewhat obsessive control over nature and what we perceive as just that , nature humility is thus transformed into self-apothesis, validating the individuals dominion over the non-human world87. If we adopt the notion of the sublime then we enter a kind of Nosphere where we see the world and respect it in a new light.

    Th e graceful mockingbird that falls drinks there and sips in the same drop a beauty that waters its eyes and a death that fl edges and fl ies. Th e petals of tulips are fl aps of the same doomed water that swells

    and hatches in the ichneumons gut88

    In We have never been modern89 the relationship of nature and culture is explored with an emphasis on hybrids between the poles. By seeking to reorient mans exploitation of man toward an exploitation of nature by man, capitalism magnifi ed both beyond measure. Th e repressed returns with a vengeance;the multitudes that were supposed to be saved from death fall back into poverty by the hundreds of millions,nature, over which we were supposed to gain absolute mastery, dominates use in an equally global fashion.It is a strange dialectic that turns slave into mans owner and master, and that suddenly informs us that we have invented ecocides as well as

    All energy needed for the project will be grown on site with fields of horizontAl windmills. the living pAth will meAnder through the site suspended Above And sunken within the ground . A series of lAndscApes will overlAp.

  • 3131313131

    large scale famine.Th is view as something of a more exploited nature in direct relationship to capitalism is something which Latour discusses. Latour is fascinated by the notion of nature as something which if it is not made by or for human beings, then it remains foreign, forever remote and hostile. Latour seems to be intimidated by the hybrids between human and non-human, with this he struggles, Where are we to classify the ozone hole story, or global warming or deforestation? Where are we to put these hybrids? Are they human because they are our work. Are they natural? Natural because they are not our doing. Th us we come to the dialectic of nature and society and Latour feels that we have a need for some form of mediator. I guess again something that can make a symbiosis within this relationship something independent of nature and society alike.

    Silent spring90 is a truly evocative piece of work, beautifully composed by Rachel Carson, where she describes the chemical fi asco of the nineteen sixties particularly in America and the a ect of such on our habitats. Carson talks of the silence in habitats and this silence as poignant,a silence caused by a death of predators of which human kind is the greatest predator,

    We may fi nd ourselves one day, one day soon,maybe-in a world that will only be a desert full of plastic,concrete and electronic robots. In that world there will be no more nature,in that world man and a few domestic animals will be the only living creatures. And yet,man cannot live without some measure of contact with nature.It is

    essential to his happiness. People are themselves responsible for this silence according to Carson, No witchcraft,no enemy action had silenced the rebirth of new life in this stricken world. Th e people had done it themselves. We try to rush nature, we use its resources and are surprised when natural disasters occur . We should stop and recognise the deliberate pace of nature. Carson discusses the soil, the water and the green mantle of plants, and their respective abuse and importance to the sustenance of our own lives. Th e soil community, then consists of a web of interwoven lives, each in some way related to the others, the living creatures depending on the soil, but the soil in turn a vital element of the earth only so long as the community within it fl ourishes, so hence she is telling us of the importance of the relationship

    Along with the design of the ArchitecturAl lAndscApe there will be thAt of the ground of the eArth , the surfAce which touches And Alters thAt existing.

  • 3232323232

    of the creatures including humans to the natural soil and ground on which we rest, however it is important that this relationship becomes a symbiosis. We need to respect also the green mantle that crawls on the soils surface as, presumably the weed is taking something from the soil;perhaps it is also contributing something to it.As Everything in nature is related to everything else.

    We cannot understand nature and its processes and that we are part of this. Th is is the inherent problem for us. Wilderness may then be undoubtedly beyond our reach as something incomprehensible, but what if architecture can become wilderness, a system that repairs itself and grows. Architecture could then make nature into something more fathomable which we begin to understand and see our place within. Wilderness could been as a tool of land reclamation

    as a tool for making new , fascinating spaces in symbiosis with their sites. Nature is often observed as permanence in relation to that transience of human life. We need to re-evaluate our position here, we need to rethink how we design and build and what implications it has on the biosphere of which we are mere caretakers.

    We fancy that the situation can be controlled by the very thing that caused it to spiral out of control in

    the fi rst place9

    1. Aldo Leopold : Sand county Almanac.19482. ird Landscape a notion coined by Gilles Clement.

    3. Deborah Gans and Claire Weisz , AD, Extreme Sites e Greening of Brown eld sites INTRODUCTION . Extract of a statement.4. M. Allen, Ideas at Matter: e World of Jane Jacobs (1997); T. Mennel, J. Ste ens, and C. Klemek, ed.5. Aldo Leopold; Sand county Almanac Wilderness . It maybe could thrive however if we let it6. Gilles Clement/ Philip Rahm ; Environ(ne)ment (Approaches for tomorrow)7. One where diversity is utmost and where nature has begun to reclaim what belongs to it8. Gilles Clement/ Philip Rahm ; Environ(ne)ment (Approaches for tomorrow) e idea that wilderness would be given freedom . Like a child allowed to play, to crawl.9. Keywords: A vocabulary of culture and society; William, R . Ecplanation of the word-Nature Pg 219-22410. Keywords: A vocabulary of culture and society; William, R Explanation of the the term ecology, Pg 11111. Oxford English de nition12. Why Ecological Urbanism? Moshen Mostafavi as cited in : Ecological Urban-ism Mostafavi,M.&G.Doherty (eds.). Baden, Switzerland: Harvard University & Lars Muller Publishers. Pg 16 Why Ecological Urbanism? Moshen Mostafavi13. Why Ecological Urbanism? Moshen Mostafavi as cited in : Ecological Urban-ism Mostafavi,M.&G.Doherty (eds.). Baden, Switzerland: Harvard University & Lars Muller Publishers. Pg 28 Why Ecological Urbanism? Moshen Mostafavi14. Why Ecological Urbanism? Moshen Mostafavi as cited in : Ecological Urban-ism Mostafavi,M.&G.Doherty (eds.). Baden, Switzerland: Harvard University & Lars Muller Publishers. Pg 2815. Why Ecological Urbanism? Moshen Mostafavi as cited in : Ecological Urban-ism Mostafavi,M.&G.Doherty (eds.). Baden, Switzerland: Harvard University & Lars Muller Publishers. Pg 36

    the Architecture of the ground, eArth mAnipulAtion is one of metAbolism which filters the pollutAnts on the site And Allows for A site for A new wAy of living in symbiosis with soil.

  • 333333

    16. Notes on the third ecology, Kwinter as cited in : Ecological Urbanism Mostafavi,M.&G.Doherty (eds.). Baden, Switzerland: Harvard University & Lars Muller Publishers. Pg103 Notes on the third ecology,Kwinter17. e return of nature to demystify the ecological and the sustainable is to reveal the possibility of architecture. as cited in : Ecological Urbanism Mostafavi,M.&G.Doherty (eds.). Baden, Switzerland: Harvard University & Lars Muller Publishers. Pg137 18. Return to Nature as cited in : Ecological Urbanism Mostafavi,M.&G.Doherty (eds.). Baden, Switzerland: Harvard University & Lars Muller Publishers. Pg23519. Return to Nature as cited in : Ecological Urbanism Mostafavi,M.&G.Doherty (eds.). Baden, Switzerland: Harvard University & Lars Muller Publishers. Pg23520. Petropolis:Aerial perspectives on the Alberta tar sands 2007, Peter Mettler , Green peace Canada21. Petropolis:Aerial perspectives on the Alberta tar sands 2007, Peter Mettler , Green peace Canada A dictation of the nal and only narration in the lm.22. Petropolis:Aerial perspectives on the Alberta tar sands 2007, Peter Mettler , Green peace Canada e ending poignant quote.23. Oil city: Petro landscapes and sustainable futures. Michael Watts as cited in : Ecological Urbanism Mostafavi,M.&G.Doherty (eds.). Baden, Switzerland: Harvard University & Lars Muller Publishers. pg42024. Oil city: Petro landscapes and sustainable futures. Michael Watts as cited in : Ecological Urbanism Mostafavi,M.&G.Doherty (eds.). Baden, Switzerland: Harvard University & Lars Muller Publishers. pg42025. Oil city: Petro landscapes and sustainable futures. Michael Watts as cited in : Ecological Urbanism Mostafavi,M.&G.Doherty (eds.). Baden, Switzerland: Harvard University & Lars Muller Publishers. pg42126. Ed Burtynskys Manufactured landscapes; Directed by Jennifer Baichwal and Ed Mettler. A documentary lm which examines a new form of man made landscapes , that of the manufactured ones. All quotes are dictation from the lm.27. e Big Foot revolution, Yu as cited in : Ecological Urbanism

    Mostafavi,M.&G.Doherty (eds.). Baden, Switzerland: Harvard University & Lars Muller Publishers. pg 28228. Bio Inspired Adaptive Architecture and Sustainability , Ingber as cited in : Ecological Urbanism Mostafavi,M.&G.Doherty (eds.). Baden, Switzerland: Harvard University & Lars Muller Publishers. pg30529. Nature Culture as cited in : Ecological Urbanism Mostafavi,M.&G.Doherty (eds.). Baden, Switzerland: Harvard University & Lars Muller Publishers. pg46830. Nature Culture as cited in : Ecological Urbanism Mostafavi,M.&G.Doherty (eds.). Baden, Switzerland: Harvard University & Lars Muller Publishers. pg46831. Nature Culture as cited in : Ecological Urbanism Mostafavi,M.&G.Doherty (eds.). Baden, Switzerland: Harvard University & Lars Muller Publishers. pg47132. Insurgent Ecologies:Reclaiming ground in Landscape and Urbanism, Lister as cited in : Ecological Urbanism Mostafavi,M.&G.Doherty (eds.). Baden, Switzerland: Harvard University & Lars Muller Publishers. pg54633. L. H. Gunderson and C. S. Holling, Eds., Panarchy: Understanding Transfor-mations in Human and Natural Systems, Island Press, Washington, DC, USA, 2002 pg 104 34. L. H. Gunderson and C. S. Holling, Eds., Panarchy: Understanding Transfor-mations in Human and Natural Systems, Island Press, Washington, DC, USA, 2002 pg 10535. L. H. Gunderson and C. S. Holling, Eds., Panarchy: Understanding Transfor-mations in Human and Natural Systems, Island Press, Washington, DC, USA, 2002 pg 11036. e geography of mother nature- Peter Fuller as cited in : e Iconography of landscape -pg 1337. e geography of mother nature- Peter Fuller as cited in : e Iconography of landscape pg 2438. e geography of mother nature- Peter Fuller as cited in : e Iconography of landscape pg 24

    39. Brown, V., Harris, J. And Russell, J. (2010) Tackling Wicked Problems rough the Transdisciplinary Imagination. London: Earthscan pg 24240. Brown, V., Harris, J. And Russell, J. (2010) Tackling Wicked Problems rough the Transdisciplinary Imagination. London: Earthscan pg 28341. Design With Nature: Ian McHarg; e Plight . pg2242. Design With Nature: Ian McHarg; e Plight .pg2443. Design With Nature: Ian McHarg; e cast and the capsule. pg 5144. Design With Nature: Ian McHarg; e cast and the capsule. pg5145. Design With Nature: Ian McHarg; e cast and the capsule. pg5246. Design With Nature: Ian McHarg; e cast and the capsule. pg5347. Design With Nature: Ian McHarg; e world is a capsule.pg9948. Design With Nature: Ian McHarg; e cast and the capsule. pg10049. Design With Nature: Ian McHarg; e Naturalist. pg12550. Design With Nature: Ian McHarg;Prospect. pg19651. Design With Nature: Ian McHarg;Prospect. pg19752. Fundamentals of Ecology: Eugene Odum, Basic ecological principles and concepts, pg 2853. Fundamentals of Ecology: Eugene Odum, Principles and concepts pertaining to organisation at community level, pg15754. Fundamentals of Ecology: Eugene Odum, Principles and concepts pertaining to organisation at community level, pg15855. Fundamentals of Ecology: Eugene Odum, pg43256. International Journal of Wilderness:December 2003. Vol. 9,No.3 Urban Wilderness in Europe- Rewilding at the urban fringe, Matthias Diemer, Martin Held, and Sabine Hofmeister. Pg 757. International Journal of Wilderness:December 2003. Vol. 9,No.3 Urban Wilderness in Europe- Rewilding at the urban fringe, Matthias Diemer, Martin Held,

    An Architecture of cleAnsing the wAter within the lAke so thAt which sits within is pure And cleAr. thAt the lAke And lAter the quArries mAy Act Ad reservoirs for storAge of cleAn wAter.

  • 343434

    and Sabine Hofmeister. Pg 858. e Ecosystem Approach: Complexity, Uncertainty, and Managing for Sus-tainability :Waltner-Toews,D.J.Kay & N-M.Lister (eds.)Mississippi Floods: Designing a Shi ing landscape , Todd W.Bressi Places pg 3859. William Cronon, ed., Uncommon Ground: Rethinking the Human Place in Nature, New York: W. W. Norton & Co., 1995 , p6960. William Cronon, ed., Uncommon Ground: Rethinking the Human Place in Nature, New York: W. W. Norton & Co., 1995, p6961. William Cronon, ed., Uncommon Ground: Rethinking the Human Place in Nature, New York: W. W. Norton & Co., 1995e , p8262. William Cronon, ed., Uncommon Ground: Rethinking the Human Place in Nature, New York: W. W. Norton & Co., 1995, pg 9063. Evernden, Neil, 1992. e Social Creation of Nature. Baltimore and London: Johns Hopkins University Press., pg 11164. Evernden, Neil, 1992. e Social Creation of Nature. Baltimore and London: Johns Hopkins University Press. pg11365. Mississippi Floods: Designing a Shi ing landscape , Todd W.Bressi Places as cited in : e Ecosystem Approach: Complexity, Uncertainty, and Managing for Sustain-ability :Waltner-Toews,D.J.Kay & N-M.Lister (eds.)pg 3866. Mississippi Floods: Designing a Shi ing landscape , Todd W.Bressi Places as cited in : e Ecosystem Approach: Complexity, Uncertainty, and Managing for Sustain-ability :Waltner-Toews,D.J.Kay & N-M.Lister (eds.)pg 3967. Mississippi Floods: Designing a Shi ing landscape , Todd W.Bressi Places e Ecosystem Approach: Complexity, Uncertainty, and Managing for Sustainability :Waltner-Toews,D.J.Kay & N-M.Lister (eds.)pg 3968. American Scientist: A quarterly publication of the society of the Sigma XI devoted to the encouragement of research in science: Vol.33 Jan 1945 e Biosphere and the Nosphere , W.I. Vernadsky.Pg 169. American Scientist: A quarterly publication of the society of the Sigma XI

    devoted to the encouragement of research in science: Vol.33 Jan 1945 e Biosphere and the Nosphere , W.I. Vernadsky.Pg 170. American Scientist: A quarterly publication of the society of the Sigma XI devoted to the encouragement of research in science: Vol.33 Jan 1945 e Biosphere and the Nosphere , W.I. Vernadsky.Pg 171. American Scientist: A quarterly publication of the society of the Sigma XI devoted to the encouragement of research in science: Vol.33 Jan 1945 e Biosphere and the Nosphere , W.I. Vernadsky.Pg 472. American Scientist: A quarterly publication of the society of the Sigma XI devoted to the encouragement of research in science: Vol.33 Jan 1945 e Biosphere and the Nosphere , W.I. Vernadsky.Pg 4 Huygens Principle73. American Scientist: A quarterly publication of the society of the Sigma XI devoted to the encouragement of research in science: Vol.33 Jan 1945 e Biosphere and the Nosphere , W.I. Vernadsky.Pg 1074. Nature Vol.415, nature.com: Geology of Mankind,Paul J. Crutzen, Pg2375. Urban Landscapes and sustainable cities,Erik Andersson as cited in : e Eco-system Approach: Complexity, Uncertainty, and Managing for Sustainability :Waltner-Toews,D.J.Kay & N-M.Lister (eds.)76. Urban Landscapes and sustainable cities,Erik Andersson as cited in : e Eco-system Approach: Complexity, Uncertainty, and Managing for Sustainability :Waltner-Toews,D.J.Kay & N-M.Lister (eds.)77. e Ecosystem Approach: Complexity, Uncertainty, and Managing for Sus-tainability :Waltner-Toews,D.J.Kay & N-M.Lister (eds.)Urban Landscapes and sustain-able cities,Erik Andersson78. Walker, B and D Salt (2006) Resilience thinking: sustaining ecosystems and people in a changing world, Washington D.C.: Island Press.79. Walker, B and D Salt (2006) Resilience thinking: sustaining ecosystems and people in a changing world, Washington D.C.: Island Press. Pg480. Walker, B and D Salt (2006) Resilience thinking: sustaining ecosystems and

    people in a changing world, Washington D.C.: Island Press. In the loop81. e provisional title of my thesis82. New Literary History, 07/1999, Vol.30, Issue 3, pp 603-623. Toward an eco-logical sublime, Christopher Hitt pg 60383. New Literary History, 07/1999, Vol.30, Issue 3, pp 603-623. Toward an eco-logical sublime, Christopher Hitt pg 60384. New Literary History, 07/1999, Vol.30, Issue 3, pp 603-623. Toward an eco-logical sublime, Christopher Hitt pg 60385. New Literary History, 07/1999, Vol.30, Issue 3, pp 603-623. Toward an eco-logical sublime, Christopher Hitt pg 60486. New Literary History, 07/1999, Vol.30, Issue 3, pp 603-623. Toward an eco-logical sublime, Christopher Hitt pg 60587. New Literary History, 07/1999, Vol.30, Issue 3, pp 603-623. Toward an eco-logical sublime, Christopher Hitt pg 60688. New Literary History, 07/1999, Vol.30, Issue 3, pp 603-623. Toward an eco-logical sublime, Christopher Hitt pg 60789. Latour, Bruno. We Have Never Been Modern. Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP, 1993.90. Carson, Rachel. Silent Spring. New York: Houghton Mi in, 1962.91. New Literary History, 07/1999, Vol.30, Issue 3, pp 603-623. Toward an eco-

    logical sublime, Christopher Hitt pg 612

    the lAke And quArry would be reprofiled using the Architecture As A meAns to do this so thAt they mAy be suited to life both of humAns And thAt of birds, thAt symbiotic living mAy be possible in this plAce.

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    BIBLIOGRAPHY

    Allen,M. (1997) Ideas Th at Matter: Th e World of Jane Jacobs; T. Mennel, J. Ste ens, and C. Klemek, ed.

    Brown, V., Harris, J. And Russell, J. (2010) Tackling Wicked Problems Th rough the Transdisciplinary Imagination; London: Earthscan

    Burtynsky, Ed . (2006) Manufactured landscapes; Directed by Jennifer Baichwal and Ed Mettler.

    Carson, Rachel. (1962) Silent Spring. New York: Houghton Mi in. Clement,Gilles/ Rahm,Philip. (2006) Environ(ne)ment (Approaches for tomorrow) Milano : Skira ; Montr al .

    Clement,Gilles . (2010 )Manifest der dritten Landschaft; Berlin : Merve.

    Cronon, William ed. (1995) Uncommon Ground: Rethinking the Human Place in Nature, New York: W. W. Norton & Co.

    Crutzen, Paul J. Nature Vol.415, nature.com: Geology of Mankind Issue: 6867, Publisher: Nature Publishing Group, Pages: 23.

    Diemer, Matthias;Held, Martin, and Hofmeister, Sabine. International Journal of Wilderness:December 2003. Vol. 9,No.3 Urban Wilderness in Europe- Rewilding at the urban fringe.

    Evernden, Neil. (1992)The Social Creation of Nature. Baltimore and London: Johns Hopkins University Press.

    Fuller, Peter in ; Th e Iconography of landscape,Cosgrove,Denis-,Daniels Steven. (1988)Th e geography of mother nature ; Cambridge.

    Gans, Deborah and Weisz, Claire , (2004) AD, Extreme Sites Th e Greening of Brownfi eld sites; London : Wiley-Academy, .

    Gunderson,L. H. and Holling, C. S. Eds., (2002)Panarchy: Understanding Transformations in Human and Natural Systems, Island Press, Washington, DC, USA.

    Hitt, Christopher .New Literary History, 07/1999, Vol.30, Issue 3, pp 603-623. Toward an ecological sublime.

    Latour, Bruno. (1993)We Have Never Been Modern. Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP.

    Leopold, Aldo ; (1968 ) A sand county Almanac, Part 3 Pg 165-226; Oxford University Press.

    the design of the ground Aims to cleAnse pollutAnts on the eAstern side thAt of odour by filtering And to the western side thAt of noise from the plAnt operAtions And of the motorwAy by growing buffer zones which After the plAnt closes would be Allowed to spreAd And reclAim the lAnd where on it sits.

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    Mettler, Peter ; (2007) Petropolis:Aerial perspectives on the Alberta tar sands.

    Mc Harg ,I.(1969 )Design with Nature,New York:Wiley. M. Mostafavi & G. Doherty (eds.) (2010) Ecological Urbanism. Baden, Switzerland: Harvard University & Lars Mller Publishers.

    Odum, E. P. (1971 )Fundamentals of Ecology (3d ed. ); R. L. Smith, ed.

    Waltner-Toews, D. J. Kay & N-M. Lister (eds.) 2008. Th e Ecosystem Approach: Complexity Uncertainty and Managing for Sustainability. New York: Columbia University Press.

    Williams,Raymond (1976) Keywords: A vocabulary of culture and society; Croom Helm

    W.I. Vernadsky.P (1945) American Scientist: A quarterly publication of the society of the SigmaXI devoted to the encouragement of research in science: Vol.33 Jan 1945 Th e Biosphere and the Nosphere

    the design of the lAnd And of the ground Also Aims to provide As much food As possible for those living there, crops would grow And filter between the mAin metAbolic processes to be inserted.

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    on the fAr west of the site in the quArry reed beds would be constructed to its edge And dovecotes Added to creAte A sAnctuAry hAbitAt for wildlife.

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    in its entirety the design Aims to creAte A better reAlity in this plAce And to reclAim the wilderness of thAt existing to set up A frAmework for A new plAce of living And A new wAy of creAting living Architecture.

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    my finAl project Arrived At A design which negotiAted between the site And thAt of A new topogrAphy on the ground. buildings were set up As frAmework for both nAture And inhAbitAtion, A frAmework to be wAlked on And one which would both Allow And foster growth within it.

    Overall Final Presentation

    Timber sectional model through site | scale 1:200

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    Map of Ireland showing geographical location site in relation to limerick city

    map of shannon estuary with projected future

    structures over And within. the buildings Act As A new topogrAphy on the site, one to be wAlked over to Allow people to experience whAt is there in A new wAy. they Also Act As A frAmework for nAture And would Allow for the eventuAl reclAmAtion of wilderness on the site, thus giving it bAck to nAture.

    the project Acts As A critique of those plAces where we ordinArily wouldnt or couldnt live or inhAbit: to site something in A plAce which seems nAturAl but thAt is creAted from A number of unnAturAl processes.

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    1840 1938 1950

    1987 2002 2012

    2052 drawings of process of sites anatomical creation

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    Plan of building on reed bed & sketch planning | scale 1:500 model of building on reed bed | scale 1:500

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    Plan of building at disused quarry & sketch planning | scale 1:500 Photos of site model details | scale 1:1000

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    Plan of building on water & sketch planning | scale 1:500 Photos of Site model details | scale 1:1000

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    sketch model of building | scale 1:1000sketch sectional model of building | scale 1:50 sketch of Detail

    section through building on reed bed | Scale 1:100

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    People live there, people live in the land and on the land, they harvest and learn from the land on which they dwellits a warm protective place, but also a place where one can get in direct contact with nature in a number of different ways.

    I arrive by boat to a timber plinth a threshold from water to land, it is wet the timber glistens from the fresh rain on its surface. I hear the wind rustling through the bed of rushes which protect the edge of the water, and trees planted like a collinade protect me from the wind. I walk inside a skin like blanket, I feel as if a coat has been draped on my shoulders, I see the sky dappled now ,but also feel safe as if

    within. I can hear the rain fall on the surface above, I can see a topography ahead of me, undulating from the surface of the earth.

    I walk along I discover some places within the land, their thresholds are barely legible, distorted by the wilderness entering inside. I follow a path created by the shaping within the land. I find a place sunken in which I can sleep it

    perspective-photomontages of process of movement through site.

    A nArrAtive of the plAce

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    is small, perfectly proportioned to my bed I feel as if Im within a blanket, inhabiting the skin of the building. I can smell trees, I feel safe, . The smell of food wafts by my face. I awaken and meander through the enclosure. The food comes from the gardens. We harvest it and we process that which needs it on the outer shell of the building. We sell some of the food, some of us research its attributes and work on

    developing new crops which may be planted here.We only eat that which we have on site, we smell the produce, we see it grow , we work with it and it becomes part of us and part of the enclosure.

    The enclosure is somewhat blurred the growth enters inside and we penetrate the shell to move outside. We become part of the growth and

    that becomes part of us.

    I move along hedgerows and walk to the edge of the water. I use a wooden jug to take water from the lake to use for washing the food. I walk through a number of thresholds to bring the water to the market side. I spill some now. I look down the water is rolling along the timber and then disappears down through the thresholds between the spaces

    perspective-photomontages of process of movement through site.

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    sliding over the edge and dripping through to the reed bed below.

    Children play along the water and watch as their parents collect it for farming they grow up respecting and understanding its potential and value.

    They learn in some of the enclosures, learning is linked to libraries with information held in books but more importantly to physical

    attributes, the water, the soil, the presence of manmade things, the scarred edge of the quarry. They learn by smell, taste, touch, sight and sound. They learn in relation to those who research and produce.

    They are nurtured by the land within the enclosure and they therefore respect and nurture it.

    Sometimes people arrive here and events are hosted by us however the skins of enclosure allows for expansion to such so that no further extension is needed to house such events. The people come and are filtered into the enclosures and along the paths created by the structure. They act as transitory parasites to the site which hosts them . The people who come symbiotically mesh into an ephemeral existence on site and

    perspective-photomontages of process of movement through site.

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    then once again leave, having not affected what is there. It is as if the site opens its pores and allows inhabitation within them if only for awhile.

    The buildings or skins act only as a filter to the site, to allow those who live there whether permanently or in a transitory manner to inhabit the topography as shaped by them. to sit within the layers of skin and to create a new reality on the site that of a fourth landscape, that of a natural unnatural, a framework for life of people and finally for reclamation of wilderness.

    timber development idea sketches photos of detail model | Scale 1:20

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    site plan of proposal | scale 1:1000

    52525252

    section of project | scale 1:20 photos of detail model | scale 1:20

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    section through building at quarry | scale 1:500

    section through building at waters edge | scale 1:500

    Perspective of entire proposal on site | NTS

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    photos of sectional model through site | scale 1:200 photos of sketch building model| scale 1:1000

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    longitudinal section through site | scale 1:500

    model of entire site proposal | scale 1:2500 photo of model of building on reed bed | scale 1:500

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    List of Images

    All images Authors own

    Cover Page 1

    Photograph of concept model looking at shelter and ways to create such in a skin like manner.

    Acknowledgements page

    Photograph of semester one concept model looking at the meshing of architecture to land.

    Contents page

    Photograph of model looking at how a structure maybe cantilievered from the edge of the lake.

    Schedule of areas Page 1

    Diagram of relationships as required on site by the program.

    Images on Pages 10-11

    Photographs of site as taken by myself during a number of site visits.Drawings as created to depict site location.

    Images on pages 13-18

    Photographs of models and drawings of work from the first semester from a collation of primer projects.

    Images on Pages 19-36

    Photographs of models and drawings leading to the design of the final thesis project.

    External cover image

    Sketch site plan of proposal in work at time of print.

    final thesis project

    drawings and photos of models(Titles as per individual labelling)All have been scaled to fit into this document

    pages 39- 55